The Korea Herald

지나쌤

Asia shines as 2011 ends under cloud of euro area

By Korea Herald

Published : Dec. 11, 2011 - 22:21

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HONG KONG (AFP) ― The sight of French President Nicolas Sarkozy running to Beijing to solicit funds to save the eurozone summed up what for some was the economic story of 2011 ― Asia’s boom versus the West’s gloom.

Coming after some regional nations were forced to go cap-in-hand to the International Monetary Fund for bailouts amid the 1997-98 Asian financial crisis, the irony was not lost on observers.

As 2011 draws to a close with the U.S. recovery barely at a trot, Europe staring into an economic abyss and even Brazil ― once a member of the high-growth emerging club ― facing possible recession, Asia is a beacon of hope.

Its economic emergence has also brought new diplomatic clout, with President Barack Obama very publicly shifting Washington’s foreign policy focus towards the region at two summits in November.

Obama used the APEC summit in Hawaii to propel ambitious plans for the world’s largest free trade zone, the Trans-Pacific Partnership. Twelve of APEC’s 21 members pledged to join the talks, including Japan, the world’s third-biggest economy.

The GDP growth numbers tell a story of a two-track global economy divided between an emerging East and declining West.

Eurozone woes so far have not hurt Asia’s export-reliant economies as severely as the 2008-2009 U.S. subprime mortgage crisis that sharply reduced global trade.

But analysts warn that Asia’s success cannot be taken for granted heading into 2012, especially if Europe falls into recession.

The two powerhouses of regional growth, China and India, were showing cracks by the third quarter of 2011 as export markets faltered, domestic demand softened, debts mounted and production slowed.

Japan struggled to recover from its March quake-tsunami disaster and Thailand’s output drowned in rising floodwaters. Hong Kong, Singapore, South Korea and Taiwan all reported weak second-half figures.

“The main strength of Asia has been financial. Its banks are sound and aren’t laden with extreme levels of bad debt,” HSBC Co-head of Asian Economics Research Frederic Neumann said.

“There has been a credit boom across the region which fuelled economic growth. In that regard Asia’s resilience is somewhat artificial.”

China’s deep fiscal reserves drew a stream of high-level visitors including Sarkozy to Beijing this year to try to persuade the authorities to contribute to the European bailout fund.

But growth in China, the world’s second-largest economy, is expected to have slowed to 9.2 percent in 2011 compared with the blistering 10.4 percent set in 2010, according to state-run think tank Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.

The academy projects growth to slide to 8.9 percent in 2012, its lowest point in more than a decade.

Analysts such as Dong Tao of Credit Suisse are however expecting no more than 8.0 percent ― uncomfortably close to the 7.0 percent minimum the government says is required to maintain social stability.

Neumann said he believed China was heading for a “soft landing” in 2012, but was more cautious about Beijing’s ability to sustain its credit-fuelled growth into 2014-2015. The same applied for the region as a whole, he added.

“The region’s growth is to a large part dependent on rapid credit expansion. Sceptics would question whether Asia is experiencing its own credit bubble similar to what the West went through three or four years ago,” he said.

Analysts said the main risk of a “hard landing” in 2012 was in India where growth slipped to a two-year low of 6.9 percent in the latest quarter, hit by a series of interest rate hikes that have done little to curb high inflation.